'We're Michif people': Storytelling project revitalizes Mtis history in Sask. - Action News
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Saskatchewan

'We're Michif people': Storytelling project revitalizes Mtis history in Sask.

Eight stories have been compiled as part of a project to reinvigorate Mtis history in Saskatchewan.

Mtis elder Nora Cummings wants her story to bring attention to Mtis history

Nora Cummings, left, and her sister, Phyllis, taken at the Road Allowance community on the outskirts of Saskatoon. (Submitted by Nora Cummings)

Nora Cummings remembers the little shack she lived in on the outskirts of Saskatoon as part of the Road Allowance community a part of Mtis history she wants people to remember and understand.

The 84-year-old Mtis elder and Mtis NationSaskatchewan senator lived with her family in the Road Allowance community which was near where Aden Bowman Collegiate now stands shortly after she was born in 1938until she was in her mid-teens in the early 1950s.

"This is my community. I always call it my community. I was born and raised here," Cummings told Leisha Grebinksi, host of CBC's Saskatoon Morning.

Nora's mother, Irene Dimick, in 1952. (Submitted by Nora Cummings)

Cummings's story is part ofLii Mimwayr Di Faamii (Family Memories), acompilation of eight stories from members of the Gabriel Dumont Local #11, a Mtis local in Saskatoon. They told their own histories during a storytelling workshop. The stories were later transcribed and put together into a magazine.

Cummings's story is the only one about living in a Road Allowance community. She said she is concerned that people of Saskatchewan don't realize that there's a lot of Mtis and Michif history in Saskatchewan.

Road Allowance communities

Cheryl Troupe is an assistant professor of history at the University of Saskatchewan who specializes in Mtis history, and a member of Gabriel Dumont Local #11. She was also involved in editing the project.

She said Road Allowance communities were typically settled by peoplelike the Mtis, who were displaced from their homes, on Crown land designated for roads.

"Mtis families [took]up residence out there because there's no one else there and because the city [wasn't] looking at that part of the city yet," Troupe explained.

When the city started to expand in the early 1950s, the Mtispeoplewere pushed out of the community, she said.

"People need to know, first of all, that Mtis people were in this city quite early compared to other place," she said. "And in Saskatoon, in particular, there's political activism that's happening in the '30s with Mtis people."

Nora Cummings home in the Road Allowance community, located on First Street East, Saskatoon, Sask. (Submitted by Nora Cummings)

Building a community

Cummings's story in the collection recounts the more than 35 inter-related Mtis families who lived in the settlement, moving from the Round Prairie Settlement, south of Saskatoon, to thecity.

Nora said the families were accosted by government officials for gathering. The officials threatened theirfood rations, so they left, then settled on the Prairie land and started their own community.

Some of her fondest memories are from her time in the Road Allowance community, she said.

Our trueMtis history is being told by our people and through aMtis lens.- Kathie Pruden-Nansel, Mtis NationSaskatchewan

She talked about playing hockey on the icy old highway and making their own adventures as kids.

Her voice got warm thinking about a Christmas present her first doll.

"When I drive by there, [I think], there's a lot of good memories," she said. "They wrapped [the doll]and showed us how to look after our baby and it was always my pride."

She still struggled with racism when attending the local school.She mentionedtimes when she was called an "Indian" by people, or "savage" by a nun, though she wasn't aware how she was related to either term.

Nora's Parents, Jerry Ouellette and Irene Dimick. (Submitted by Nora Cummings)

"We, as a Mtis/Michif people, are our own people," she said. "They would say, 'Are you Indian?' And we'd say no, we're Michif people ... [we] are our own people."

History of theMtis, told byMtis

Angie Caron, president of Gabriel Dumont Local #11, said many people have never heard of the Road Allowance community. She said she often hears a lack of awareness aroundMtis history.

"That history was forgotten, I think, definitely in the school systems for so long that any of this revitalization work that we do is always so exciting," she said.

Kathie Pruden-Nansel, the Mtis NationSaskatchewan director of the Saskatoon and area region,said it saddens her to hear that people are completely unaware of some Mtis history, butshe is happy to hear it's coming to light.

For her, it's important that non-Mtis people understandMtishistory and how some of their struggles are different from other Indigenous people.

"We've often been referred to as 'The Forgotten People,'and the Road Allowance was a concrete example of how theMtis citizens have tended to be pushed to the side,"Pruden-Nansel said.

"Our trueMtis history is being told by our people and through aMtis lens."

With files from Saskatoon Morning